The objective of this investigation was to study the effects of the first marketed haemoglobin-based oxygen carrier, Hemoglobin glutamer-200 (bovine) (Hb-200) (Oxyglobin) on splanchnic perfusion and oxygenation in a canine model of acute hypovolaemia. Twelve anaesthetized dogs [mean weight 30.8 (S.D. 1.4) kg] were instrumented for recordings of heart rate (HR), mean arterial pressure (MAP), central venous pressure (CVP), cardiac output and cranial mesenteric arterial (CMA) and venous blood flows (CMV). Total and plasma haemoglobin (Hb), oxygen content and saturation, lactate concentration, pH and blood gases were analysed in arterial, mixed venous and mesenteric venous blood samples. Measurements were made before (baseline) and after 1 h of haemorrhage, after which animals were resuscitated with either shed blood (controls) or Hb-200 until HR, MAP and CVP returned to prehaemorrhage levels. Recordings were repeated immediately and 3 h after termination of fluid resuscitation, after which organ specimens were obtained for microscopic examination. Haemorrhage (average 32 ml kg(-1)) reduced MAP to 50 mm Hg, increased HR and systemic vascular resistance (SVR), and was accompanied in both the systemic and the splanchnic circulation by significant decreases in blood flow, Hb content and oxygen delivery (DO2), and lactic acidosis. In controls, all variables recovered to baseline after isovolaemic resuscitation with shed blood. In dogs resuscitated with a small volume of Hb-200 (10 ml kg(-1)), HR, MAP, CVP and CMA and CMV blood flows returned to baseline. However, cardiac output, total Hb, oxygen content and systemic and mesenteric DO2 remained depressed while SVR increased further. Mesenteric and systemic acid-base status recovered in both groups, and there was no difference in microscopic tissue damage between groups. Thus, Hb-200 reconstituted splanchnic perfusion and oxidative metabolism in spite of pronounced systemic vasoconstriction and insufficient restoration of CO and DO2; it may improve diffusive oxygen transport in the microvasculature by virtue of haemodilution and its high efficiency in the uptake and release of oxygen.
Stroma-free hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOC) have been developed to overcome problems associated with transfusion of allogeneic blood. We have studied the efficacy of the first licensed veterinary blood substitute, hemoglobin glutamer-200 bovine (Oxyglobin; Biopure, Cambridge, MA, USA, Hb-200), in a canine model of acute hypovolemia and examined whether clinically commonly used criteria are adequate to guide fluid resuscitation with this product. Twelve anesthetized dogs were instrumented for measurements of physiological variables including hemodynamic, oxygenation, and blood gas and acid-base parameters. Dogs were bled to a mean arterial pressure (MAP) of 50 mmHg for 1 h followed by resuscitation with either shed blood (controls) or Hb-200 until heart rate (HR), MAP and central venous pressure (CVP) returned to baseline. Recordings were repeated immediately and 3 h after termination of fluid resuscitation. Hemorrhage (average 32 mL/kg) caused significant decreases in total hemoglobin (Hb), mean pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP), cardiac output (CO) and oxygen delivery (DO2I), increases in HR and systemic vascular resistance (SVRI), and lactic acidosis. In controls, only re-transfusion of all shed blood returned HR, MAP and CVP to prehemorrhage values, whereas in other dogs this endpoint was reached with infusion of 10 mL/kg Hb-200. Unlike blood transfusion, Hb-200 infusion failed to return CI and DO2I to baseline and to increase arterial oxygen content (CaO2) and total Hb; SVRI further increased. Thus, commonly used criteria (HR, MAP, CVP) to guide transfusion therapy in patients posthemorrhage prove insufficient when HBOCs with pronounced vasoconstrictive action are used and lead to inadequate volume repletion.
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